The range includes a tankard, tea cup and saucer, plates, pill-box and coffee mug. The design was inspired by the elaborate Rockingham Range, first used in 1838 at the coronation banquet of Queen Victoria and most recently when the Obamas visited Buckingham Palace!

The official Diamond Jubilee china is handmade and features a border decoration of gilded oak leaves, acorns and the national symbols of daffodil, rose and thistle, entwined over a blue base. Prices range from £25 to £175.

The Diamond Jubilee china range is available to buy online from www.royalcollection.org.uk/shop and from the Royal Collection shops at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle and the Palace of Holyroodhouse

The finest pink diamond ever discovered, which was given to the Queen as a wedding present and later made into the Williamson Brooch

Jonathan Marsden, Director of the Royal Collection, said a diamond exhibition was an obvious choice for the Jubilee, adding that the Queen was “enthusiastic” about the plans.

The Queen: Sixty Photographs for Sixty Years at Windsor Castle will feature 60 photos taken by leading press photographers from the 1950s to the present day.

The pictures show the Queen on official engagements and in her private life with her family. Although, as Royal Librarian Jane Roberts commented, “the private life of the Queen is never quite the same as it is for the rest of us!”.

The pictures give a snapshot of the Queen’s eventful life, from foreign travels and state occasions, to corgis and even a meeting with Lady Gaga.

Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy at The Queen’s Gallery will be the largest ever exhibition of da Vinci’s studies of the human body.

As well as being a great Renaissance artist, da Vinci was also a pioneer in the study of the human body, and the Royal Collection holds many of his notes and drawings on the subject. Da Vinci was “one of the greatest anatomists ever to have lived,” according to curator Martin Clayton.

His study of the heart was “one of the most impressive investigations in the history of science” and diagrams produced after the dissection of human corpses are “among the clearest ever depictions of the bones and muscles”, said Clayton. Some of da Vinci’s drawings are still used by medical students today.

Queen Elizabeth II is only the second monarch to celebrate 60 years in the job. The first was Queen Victoria, who celebrated her diamond jubilee in 1897.